A wireless communication device includes a resistive-element-including RFIC and an antenna coil. The resistive-element-including RFIC includes an RFIC, a capacitive element, and resistive elements. The resistive elements and a portion of a circuit in the RFIC define a variable impedance circuit. The RFIC controls the impedance of a resistive circuit added to an antenna circuit in accordance with certain io terminals set as output ports or input ports, thus obtaining a Q value of the antenna circuit in accordance with a communication speed.
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1. A wireless communication device comprising:
a contactless communication ic including a communication terminal configured to transmit/receive a signal and an io terminal;
an antenna connected to the communication terminal of the contactless communication ic; and
a resistive element connected between the io terminal and the antenna; wherein
the io terminal is settable to define one of an input port and an output port based on an input/output control signal, and the io terminal has a different impedance when defining an input port and when defining an output port.
2. The wireless communication device according to
3. The wireless communication device according to
the communication terminal includes two communication terminals;
a first end and a second end of the antenna are connected to the two communication terminals, respectively;
the io terminal includes a first io terminal and a second io terminal;
the resistive element includes a first resistive element and a second resistive element; and
the first resistive element is connected between the first io terminal and the first end of the antenna, and the second resistive element is connected between the second io terminal and the second end of the antenna.
4. The wireless communication device according to
the io terminal further includes a third io terminal and a fourth io terminal;
the resistive element further includes a third resistive element that has a resistance value different from the first resistive element and a fourth resistive element that has a resistance value different from the second resistive element; and
the third resistive element is connected between the third io terminal and the first end of the antenna, and the fourth resistive element is connected between the fourth io terminal and the second end of the antenna.
5. The wireless communication device according to
6. The wireless communication device according to
7. The wireless communication device according to
8. The wireless communication device according to
9. The wireless communication device according to
10. The wireless communication device according to
11. The wireless communication device according to
12. The wireless communication device according to
13. The wireless communication device according to
14. The wireless communication device according to
15. The wireless communication device according to
17. The high frequency device according to
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1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a wireless communication device preferably for use in an RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) system or a near field communication (NFC) system that communicates with a partner device via an electromagnetic field signal.
2. Description of the Related Art
NFC is a wireless communication standard combining contactless identification technology and interconnection technology. Devices conforming to this standard use a frequency in the 13.56 MHz band and perform bidirectional communication at a short distance of about a few tens of cm. There are multiple communication speeds (106 kbps, 212 kbps, 424 kbps, and 848 kbps) in NFC systems. Therefore, a wide-band antenna is necessary in order to perform communication without waveform distortion even at the highest communication speed.
A design technique for widening the band of an antenna includes, as described in Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2010-109806 and Japanese Patent No. 4645762, a technique that provides multiple resonant circuits close to one another, thereby performing multiple resonances and widening the band.
As in Japanese Unexamined Patent Application Publication No. 2010-109806 and Japanese Patent No. 4645762, in the technique which provides multiple resonant circuits close to one another, thereby performing multiple resonances, it is essential to form multiple LC resonant circuits, and it is thus necessary to secure sufficient spaced for the multiple LC resonant circuits. Thus, it is difficult to embed the LC resonant circuits in a small wireless communication device such as a mobile terminal.
In addition, if an antenna with wide-band characteristics is simply used, the antenna efficiency cannot be efficiently used at the time of low-speed communication, and it is impossible to secure a necessary communication distance with a small antenna. The Q value of an antenna is expressed as “Q=fo/B.W.” (where B.W. is the bandwidth of the antenna, and Fo is the center frequency). In general, Q deteriorates as the bandwidth of an antenna becomes wider. That is, in the case of using an antenna with wide-band characteristics, the antenna is suitable for high-speed communication since the antenna itself is designed to be wide-band. However, at the time of low-speed communication where no problem is caused even when the bandwidth is narrow, the antenna is used in a state where the Q value is poor.
Therefore, preferred embodiments of the present invention provide a small wireless communication device that secures a necessary band in accordance with a communication speed.
According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a wireless communication device includes a contactless communication IC including a communication terminal configured to transmit/receive a signal and a plurality of IO terminals, an antenna connected to the communication terminal of the contactless communication IC, and a variable impedance circuit connected to the antenna and configured such that an impedance thereof changes in accordance with states of the IO terminals.
With this configuration, the impedance of the variable impedance circuit connected in parallel to the antenna is set in accordance with the states of the IO terminals of the contactless communication IC so as to appropriately set a Q value of an antenna circuit and define a necessary bandwidth.
It is preferable that the variable impedance circuit include a circuit that is provided in the contactless communication IC and that extends between the IO terminals and a ground or between the IO terminals and a power line, and resistive elements connected between the IO terminals and the antenna.
With this configuration, only a small number of circuit elements connected to the outside of the contactless communication IC are needed and are configured in a simple circuit.
It is preferable that the variable impedance circuit be a circuit including switches that are connected between the terminals and the antenna and whose states are changed in accordance with output voltages of the IO terminals, and resistive elements connected in series to the switches.
With this configuration, the Q value of the antenna circuit is easily changed to many levels by using only a small number of IO terminals.
According to various preferred embodiments of the present invention, the impedance of the variable impedance circuit connected to the antenna is set in accordance with the states of the IO terminals of the contactless communication IC, thus appropriately setting the Q value of an antenna circuit and securing a necessary band in accordance with a communication speed. Therefore, it is unnecessary to provide and configure multiple LC resonant circuits, and a small wireless communication device is provided.
The above and other elements, features, steps, characteristics and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
The RFIC 11 includes GPIO (General Purpose Input/Output) IO terminals 11P (1a, 1b, 2a, and 2b).
The RFIC 11 performs conversion between a baseband signal and a high-frequency signal. A control IC and the like are connected to the RFIC 11.
A parallel circuit of the capacitive element 14 and the antenna coil 13 is connected to two TX terminals (transmission signal terminals) Tx1 and Tx2 of the RFIC 11. Note that, although the antenna coil 13 is connected to the terminals Tx1 and Tx2 of the RFIC 11, the RFIC 11 performs not only transmission but also reception using the antenna coil 13 connected to the terminals Tx1 and Tx2.
The IO terminals 11P (1a, 1b, 2a, and 2b) of the RFIC are connected to first ends of the resistive elements R1a, R1b, R2a, and R2b, respectively. Second ends of the resistive elements R1a, R1b, R2a, and R2b are connected to either of two ends of the antenna coil 13.
These resistive elements R1a, R1b, R2a, and R2b may be chip resistors or may be resistive patterns provided on a circuit board, for example.
The capacitive element 14 defines, together with the antenna coil 13, an antenna circuit which is an LC parallel resonant circuit, and sets the resonant frequency of the antenna circuit to a certain frequency. The antenna coil 13 is configured to perform transmission/reception for near field communication by electromagnetically coupling with an antenna of a communication partner.
Therefore, in the case where the IO port 1a is set as an output port, the pull-up resistor PR is set to a “50Ω pull-up” state, and hence the IO terminal 1a is grounded with 50Ω in terms of high frequency. In the case where the IO port 1a is set as an input port, the IO terminal 1a has high impedance.
As illustrated in
The same applies to the other resistances IO_1b, IO_2a, and IO_2b illustrated in
When the resistance values of the resistive elements R1a, R1b, R2a, and R2b are represented by the same symbols, they are in the relationship R1a=R1b<R2a=R2b. It is assumed that the resistance values of the resistive elements R1a, R1b, R2a, and R2b are values within the range of, for example, about 1 kΩ to about 10 kΩ.
In the case where communication is performed at a communication speed of 106 kbps, as illustrated in the state (A) in
Note that
The RFIC 11 includes the GPIO (General Purpose Input/Output) IO terminals 11P (P1, P2, P3, and P4). The states of the switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4 are changed in accordance with the output levels of these IO terminals. First ends of the resistive elements R1a, R1b, R2a, and R2b are connected to a first end of the antenna coil 13, and second ends of the resistive elements R1a, R1b, R2a, and R2b are connected to the switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4, respectively.
The RFIC 11 performs conversion between a baseband signal and a high frequency signal. The control IC 12 controls the RFIC 11 and receives/outputs data including communication data.
A parallel circuit of the capacitive element 14 and the antenna coil 13 is connected to the two TX terminals (transmission signal terminals) Tx1 and Tx2 of the RFIC 11.
The IO terminals 11P of the RFIC 11 and IO terminals 12P of the control IC 12 are connected by signal lines 15A.
The RFIC 11 and the control IC 12 receive/output a communication signal via a data transmission line 16. The control IC 12 performs control including various settings of the RFIC 11 via the signal lines 15A. In addition, the RFIC 11 and the control IC 12 are connected to control terminals of the switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4 via the signal lines 15A and 15B.
With a circuit illustrated in
By appropriately defining the resistance values of the resistive elements R1a, R1b, R2a, and R2b, the impedance of an additional circuit connected between the two ends of the antenna coil 13 is set, and accordingly, the Q value of the antenna circuit is set to a value suitable for a communication speed.
By setting the resistance values of the resistive elements R1a, R1b, R2a, and R2b to be in a relationship of a power of two and by outputting binary code data from the IO terminals P1, P2, P3, and Pr, the impedance added to the antenna circuit is changed as power of two.
The antenna coil 13 is provided in the interior of the upper casing 52. The antenna coil 13 preferably is a conductor patterned in a rectangular or substantially rectangular spiral, for example. End portions of the antenna coil 13 abut on pin terminals 25 provided on the printed-wiring board 21 side and are electrically conducting. That is, the antenna coil 13 is electrically connected to the RFIC 11 by joining the upper casing 52 and the lower casing 51.
The antenna coil 13 is preferably formed by, for example, the MID (Molded Interconnect Device) technique using the LDS (Laser-Direct-Structuring) method. That is, a material that mixes a base polymer such as a liquid crystal polymer (LCP) or a polybutylene terephthalate (PBT) with a filler and an organic metal is used and casted, the casting is irradiated with a laser in the pattern of the antenna coil 13, and a plating is deposited only in the irradiated portion.
Besides the method of directly rendering an antenna coil on a casing, a method of attaching a flexible substrate, on which an antenna coil is provided, to a casing via a double-sided adhesive sheet may be used.
A booster coil antenna 24 is provided in the interior of the upper casing 52. The booster coil antenna 24 magnetically couples with the power feeding coil 23, as will be described later, and operates as a magnetic field antenna.
The power feeding coil 23 and the booster coil antenna are arranged such that magnetic flux crosses the power feeding coil 23 and the booster coil antenna 24.
Although the RFIC 11, the resistive elements R1a, R1b, R2a, and R2b, and the power feeding coil 23 are separately mounted on the printed-wiring board in the example illustrated in
The resistance value between the antenna port ANT_port of the RFIC 11 and the antenna 22′ is changed in accordance with a combination of the ON/OFF states of the switches SW1, SW2, SW3, and SW4, thus controlling the Q value of the antenna. In this manner, various preferred embodiments of the present invention are also applicable to a field emission-type antenna.
Although four switches are preferably used in the example illustrated in
Although the present invention has been described with reference to the specific preferred embodiments, the present invention is not limited to these examples.
For example, a high frequency device of the present invention is not limited to an RFID reader/writer and may be configured as an RFID tag. In addition, although the examples in which the Q value of the antenna preferably is controlled at the time of transmission/reception have been discussed in the preferred embodiments, the high frequency device of the present invention is applicable to an antenna dedicated for transmission or an antenna dedicated for reception in accordance with the purpose. In addition, the high frequency device according to various preferred embodiments of the present invention may be applied at the time of only one of transmission and reception. Furthermore, if the transmission timing and the reception timing are separated, the Q value of the antenna may be made different at the time of transmission and reception.
While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described above, it is to be understood that variations and modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the present invention. The scope of the present invention, therefore, is to be determined solely by the following claims.
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